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Posted

I have severe stenosis at my L4-5.  Bulging disc.  My rehab dr here tried acupuncture and traction to no avail.  I inquired about stem cell and she mentioned S Spine and Nerve Hospital in Bangkok.  I believe it is new as I can't find many reviews aside from their own facebook page.  Wondering if any thaivisa members have any experience there or other words of wisdom.  Surgeon at Vichara here in Phuket wants to do microdiscectomy.  Would like to try less risky procedures such as prolotherapy or PRP (protein rich plasma) (These are all injections). Thx.

Posted

Thanks Sheryl for your advice and detailed reply.  I have had central spinal stenosis for 4 months. The bulging disc is pressing on the nerve roots in the spinal canal. The nerve roots exit the foramen ok. I also have arthritic changes to my joint facets, crowding out the nerve roots even more, but the surgeon suggested the microdiscectomy was sufficient. I have no back pain. Only sciatica butt/thigh pain and numb/tingling lower leg and foot when standing.  Apparently people like me (radiculopathy and no back pain) have the best surgical outcomes but of course there are risks.

 

S Spine and Nerve only mentions the laser surgery on their website, aside from conventional surgery.  I will make an appointment and bring my MRI with me to see what they have to say.  I'll also visit Prof Wicharn at BCH. Thx again.

Posted

If your budget stretches beyond Vachira, and you don't wish to travel to the capital, the Bangkok Phuket Hospital has an excellent Orthopedic Unit & Spine-Academy:

https://www.phukethospital.com/center/orthopedic-unit-and-spine-academy/

 

I can recommend Dr Chaiyuth

 

I have suffered from lumbar (spinal) stenosis for decades, complete with loss of feeling in legs and toes, but have never braved laminectomy surgery.  (I've had other more pressing problems that have taken precedence),  I know of a local teacher who had that surgery and he went from cripple to normal walking gait within a very short time.

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Posted

I had a herniated (busted) disk at S4 - 5 I think (this was a long time ago, 2004) and had micro disketomy (spelling?) at Bumrungrad after 8 month of living hell. The operation was routine ie nothing special, no hassle and quick to get over with. My point is that you don't need a master chef to do it. 

 

2 nights of hospital stay, a follow up visit 2 weeks later and that was it. Cost was roughly 4k usd. I would recommend this surgery if all else fails and/or when it's time you faced the hard fact. Main thing is not to delay unneccessarily...  Btw, is this S Spine and Nerve hospital in Minburi? I passed it a couple of times and kinda wondered.

 

Oh one thing worth pointing out: the spinal cord stops way before it comes to my S4, I can't remember for sure but I think it wouldn't reach your L4 either.  One (major) less thing to worry about if this is the case.

Posted

Sorry, I disagree with@smo and think you should go for the best dr available for consideration of back surgery.
We are all different and our bodies respond differently to medical intervention.
As Sheryl says there is a difference between stenosis and buldging disc treatment.
I'm not sure but I think there is a difference in MRI machine x-ray resolution. So you also need the best MRI machine. I recently went for MRI's for lumbar surgery entering through the front side. The x-ray resolution of the slices of the different parts of my body was so detailed and clear.

Sent from my SM-J700F using Tapatalk

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  • 3 months later...
Posted

Apologies for my ignorance.  I always thought CT Scans & MRIs were pretty much the same thing, obviously, I was wrong. 

How do they differ? 

Posted

Thx TimBee.  630,000 baht!  May I ask why you didn't return to Pyathai ?  

 

As for me, I still have not had surgery. I decided to wait until I returned to Canada, as we have ("free") government health-care. Unfortunately I am getting the run-around. Some procedures, like back surgery , have extremely long wait times. Actually, I can't even get a referral for   surgery, so I am not even in the queue.  Sooo, I am again looking at getting it done in Thailand.

Posted

I was diagnosed in UK 17 yrs ago with spinal stenosis via MRI.
The spasm I was undergoing was bad enough that i still have atrophy of the inner calf.
I was offered a laminectomy but on discussion said let’s hold off a while.
I improved and have had the best years of my life as far as my back is concerned, though unfortunately now Parkinson’s weakness combined with the atrophy has now given me a limp but that won’t occur to you.


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  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

@dddave - If you haven’t already found out, it’s true CT’s and MRI’s do similar things, but basically a CT uses xrays whilst MRI’s use magnetic waves.

 

@RoyLee - Wouldn’t it be great if you could still pay what I did at Pyathai 20 yrs ago? Sadly, not even in India. I was working at a Thai life and health insurer at the time, so that’s why it cost so little. Post-op I got a 2nd opinion from an Australian consultant at Bumrungrad who told me it would only last 5 years and I’d regret it; according to him I should have spent A$40,000 in Australia and had the job done properly! He was wrong, thankfully. But during June’s operation, I discovered that the first operation on my L5 had not replaced the excised disc material, and in the interim 20 yrs, my L5 had fused to my L4, resulting in the S1 compression I was feeling before the operation. Today’s TLIF technique, with screws, rods and a replacement disc (made from the bone matter they drill out of you), avoids that shortcoming, and you’ll have the proper inter-vertebral spacing maintained by the hardware they put in. Yes, it was more expensive than in both our home countries, but for all the waiting reasons you gave, it was the only emergency way that I could go here, given that I could barely walk or sleep. All my fault for letting it get to that point, granted, but I would encourage anyone to step fearlessly into operating theatres at any of the major Thai hospitals, boasting a patient endorsed spine department. Per my earlier post beware of small clinics. This forum is an excellent place to research user experiences and to source patient endorsements!

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